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- After falling victim to a humiliating prank by the high school Queen Bee, best friends and world-class geeks, Mindy and Jodi, decide to get their revenge by uniting the outcasts of the school against her and her circle of friends.
- Jet Cosgrave returns home to claim the ranch that was stolen from him, after his father's death.
- Cho Soran leads an ordinary college student's life until he becomes involved in a terrible incident in a small town. While walking through a cemetery, Cho Soran is assaulted by zombies.
- A young boy struggles to fit into the life of a post-war English village after witnessing the death of his mother.
- A man occupies a position of trust with a merchant in an East Asian port. He's sacked after he's caught stealing, but he pretends to commit suicide, and a Captain he befriended agrees to take him to a secret trading post.
- A bounty hunter who was a Confederate Officer teams up with an ex-slave who was a Union Soldier during the Civil War. They are the Outcasts.
- Salah returns home from America after the death of his father to gain his inheritance and sell some properties, including a football club.
- Trapped in a snowbound mountain cabin, an assortment of travelers receives the unwelcome visit of a wanted outlaw.
- A man covets his neighbor's wife, with disastrous consequences for the community.
- In 1810 Ireland, a man whose wife has died finds that his daughter is accused of being a witch. A magic fiddler comes to her aid.
- Wisteria is an orphan girl living in a corner of the British Empire at the end of the 19th century. Her life is desolate and bleak, until she encounters Malbus, a powerful but equally lonely immortal being with a furry appearance, hounded by hunters. Together, Wisteria and Malbus roam the Empire-populated by humans and human-like beasts in search of a place where they can live together in peace.
- Based on the popular Chinese graphic novel The Outcast.
- It is an intriguing story of a young copper who is caught in a dilemma of love and sacrifice. Things do not remain the same for Prince Nnamdi, when his father the king disown him, Feeling a sense of indebtedness towards his fiancée whom his father called OUTCAST, Prince Nnamdi park out of king's palace to protect his fiancée.
- A young man struggles to come to terms with his true identity in a remote caste-based village in early 20th century Japan.
- A California mining camp is plagued by a series of murders. Four people come under suspicion for the killings and are swiftly run straight out of the camp. During a blizzard they take refuge in an isolated cabin, and conflicts break out among them.
- This story is about a Taoist master who went to the Heavenly Mountain.
- The tale of a member of the persecuted burakumin community desperately trying to protect his identity so that he can live a normal life as a teacher.
- When the box-office manager takes off with all the money belonging to a traveling theatre-troupe, the show's promoters and leading performers, Bill Potter and Jim Truman, have to sell off of the show's assets to a theatre in Newcastle in order to pay the actors. They have enough money left over to open up a bookie's stall in London taking bets on greyhound-racing. The local bookies send a stooge around to give them some false inside-information and they can't cover the losses they garner using the incorrect-odds, and have to sell everything they own. All that is left is a greyhound puppy which Bill determines he will train for racing and make a fortune. And then bad things really begin happening to Bill including having to escape prison, on a trumped-up charge, as part of the rubbish carried off in the garbage lorry.
- An 11-year-old kid with two countries origin who faces violence in both of them when he attempts to play with his peers, decides to write a letter to Liverpool F.C., asking to play for them!
- In a world where Guardian Angels are the norm, Sammy, a young adult struggles to discover who she is as her Guardian Angel, Angie, prefers to party over helping her find her destiny. When an ex-boyfriend moves to town, Sammy is forced to reevaluate her relationship with her best friend and Guardian Angel in order better herself as a person.
- Mae is a girl of the slums. Her antecedents are unknown. She works as a dancing girl around a rough dive where her sweetheart Bob is a waiter. Graves, a cheap sport, takes a fancy to Mae and asks the bartender who she is. The bartender tells him that nobody knows where she came from. When Graves becomes fresh with Mae, Bob warns him off. On their day off, Bob and Mae go walking in the park. They see young couples with their babies and long for a decent married existence. Judge Lewis, in his courtroom, is sternly sentencing a criminal who is pleading for mercy. A second judge enters the room and is invited to the bench as a matter of courtesy. He whispers to Judge Lewis in favor of the criminal, but Lewis is firm and sends the prisoner away condemned to the limit. Court adjourns and the two judges depart. They go down the courthouse steps and walk away to the park, where they see Bob and Mae. The second judge recognizes Bob and stops him. The judge asks him questions and Bob replies that he is behaving himself. Bob is eager to get away. Alone with Mae, Bob explains that the judge is the one that paroled him after his last fight. Back at work in the dive. Graves becomes offensive to Mae. He follows her to her room and is followed by Bob. A fight occurs in which Mae shoots Graves. Bob disappears, fearing the result of his parole if he should not obey the judge. Mae is to be tried before Judge Lewis. She is assigned a young attorney to defend her. The attorney sees her in her cell and gets her story. He can find no trace of Bob, who, however, keeps himself posted in hiding. The young attorney has secured from Mae, however, a locket given to her by her dead mother when she was a little child. The locket has a photo of her mother with the address of a photographer in a country town. The attorney visits the town, finds the old photographer, and is directed to Old Man Aitken as one who can tell about the woman of the photo. Aitken shows great emotion when he sees the photo, and on being told of Mae's coming trial before Lewis, shows great eagerness to go with the attorney. The trial is commenced, and the attorney admits the killing, but pleads self-defense and the girl's irresponsibility. He places her on the stand, and she tells her story. The judge is cold and relentless. She is asked on cross examination, "Where is this man Bob?" She doesn't know. Bob, however, has crept into the back of the courtroom. He presents himself and is examined. He corroborates Mae, but the judge, recognizing him as the boy of the park, discredits his testimony by asking him, "Are you not a paroled prisoner?" Bob admits it, and the effect on the jury is obvious. Mae is found guilty, with a recommendation for mercy. On being brought up for sentence, the attorney calls Aitken to prove the girl's irresponsibility. The prosecuting attorney jumps to his feet and objects. The judge is about to rule out Aitken's testimony, when Mae's attorney interposes, "It will not be necessary to mention the name of the father of this defendant, but I will ask the witness to identify this photograph as the girl's mother." The portrait of the locket is passed to the judge. He conceals his emotion with difficulty. Mae's attorney proceeds, "I will prove by this witness that the defendant's birth and early life are responsible." Aitken then tells his story, fading back to Mary Alden and Lewis, their love, the locket, Lewis' desertion to follow his career, sending her a letter telling her of his decision, the baby's birth, and the disappearance of mother and child. After the story the judge faints, court is adjourned, and the judge is carried out. The next day another judge is on the bench: he who had paroled Bob. He suspends sentence on Mae and she and Bob go away free. Judge Lewis is convalescent at his home in the country. Aitken brings Mae and Bob to him and he expresses his interest in them and determination to devote his life to his daughter.
- The owner of a gambling hall is entrusted with the care of a pretty young girl. He falls in love with her, but he must decide whether to let her go to his best friend, with whom he believes her to be in love, or to try to win her for himself.
- The prologue shows the life of a trapper, living in the solitude of the forest. He digs a bear trap, which is covered with boughs and grass. An Indian girl, armed with a bow and arrow, creeps close to a wild turkey, which she brings down. As she runs forward to gather up her prey she falls into the trap. Evans, the trapper, finds her there and on lifting her from the pit, finds that she has sprained her ankle, and takes her to his cabin, and makes her as comfortable as possible. As the shades of evening fall and the pain subsides, the girl drops into a slumber, and loath to awaken her, Evans leaves her in possession of his cabin and, wrapped in a blanket, sleeps outside. In the morning, the girl having recovered sufficiently, he lifts her to his horse, and mounting behind her, proceeds to the Indian camp. On the way he is attacked by a trio of Indians, who fire at him from behind a tree, and the trapper brings down one of his assailants. The others rush back to the camp, and when Evans arrives he is roughly dealt with by the Indians, but is saved by the intervention of the girl, who is the daughter of the Sioux chief. Some time later a party of Cheyennes visit the Sioux, and the chief buys the girl from her father. Though she has not seen the white trapper since the day of her accident, the Indian girl's heart has gone out to him, and the prospect of becoming the squaw of the Cheyenne chief is distasteful to her. It is an unwilling bride, indeed, whom the old Cheyenne brings to his tepee, and when he attempts to subject her, she turns upon him with a knife, and leaving his lifeless form dying in the tent, makes her escape. When she reaches her own village, however, she fears the wrath of her father, and suddenly the thought occurs to her to seek refuge again in the trapper's cabin. Evans, who has fallen in love with the girl, assures her of his protection. The Cheyennes, wild with anger at the death of their chief, call upon the Sioux to deliver the girl to them, and are assured that she is not in camp. They trail her to the cabin, and, while Evans is away examining his traps, break down the barricaded door and set the house on fire. As Evans is returning he sees the Indians gallop off with their prisoner, and flying to the Sioux camp tells of what has occurred. The Sioux chief immediately calls out his braves, who start in pursuit of the Cheyennes. The girl is about to meet her death when the Sioux arrive, and a hand-to-hand conflict ensues, in the heat of which Evans rescues the girl and gallops away with her. As the sun is setting, standing on the crest of a hill, he points out to her a wagon train of emigrants, and hand-in-hand they go to his people, and safety.
- After World War II, a German woman's romance with an American officer is complicated by a possessive former lover.
- Lavinia White and her young brother Chad are shunned by the townspeople of Twin Wells because their father Tom is serving the last part of a long prison sentence for robbing the Rysen Company of $100,000. Their only friends are Doc Meadowlark and Pat Garrett, who is employed by the Rysen Transportation Company. When released, Tom is determined to return the money to its rightful owners over the objections of Jim Judd. Judd threatens harm to Chad and forces Lavinia to aid him, under the same threat against Chad, in the stick-up of the stage in which Tom is returning to Twin Wells with the money. Pat arrives and Judd and the girl escape without the money. The money is returned and Tom prepares to settle down and make amends for the past. Judd conspires with Elias Dunkenscold, the Rysen office manager, to steal the money and frame it on Tom. In a chase, Sheriff Wilson is shot but swears Pat in as a deputy before he dies. He has to jail Tom and Lavinia has to keep quiet as the outlaws have kidnapped Chad.
- A South Seas adventurer goes after a gang that kidnaps his girlfriend, who belongs to a local tribe, in order to force him to hand over a gold shipment being sent to him.
- After young Dick Martin's father dies, his mother marries Rance Slavin, with whom Dick does not get along. Years later, after his mother has died, Dick buys his own horse ranch. He discovers one day that his horses are being stolen in large numbers, and sets out to find the thief and get his horses back. However, he is in for a surprise when he finally discovers the identity of the horse thief.
- Exposes the reasons the US incarcerates more people than any other nation on the planet---more than 2.3 million Americans are behind bars.
- See the worlds of Spooky Joe, Earth Shakes, and School: The Last Stand finally collide in this thrilling adventure. 5 years after Teddy reveals himself as the mastermind behind all of Sam's struggles and the death of Detective David, The Outcasts have risen from the ashes of Supreme Commander Moon's destructive regime. With Spooky Joe on his side, Moon only needs one more thing: Sam.
- The Great Reaper had warned them all. The one who was claimed beckoned his wife, to his bedside and whispered, "Send for our little Lucette." And so Lucette was brought in, and there at his bedside, she heard her mother promise her father to always and ever love her, their only child, Lucette. Then the omnipotent scythe moved and the father's spirit journeyed into that infinite beyond. Several years have passed. No promise bound the wife against re-marriage. She could be true to her promise to love Lucette most of all, and yet accept the offer of marriage of the man who now asks her. Lucette hears him ask her mother to be his wife. Her mother answers "yes." The child cautiously steals out of the room, her instinctiveness, her intuition, tell her that she has lost her mother's love and warns her that this man is going to disrupt her promised affection. And he does. The mother dare not show Lucette even passing attention, but he chides or quarrels. He grows domineering, he becomes petty in his meanness toward Lucette and her mother. His antipathy toward Lucette reaches its height when he takes her to a boarding-school for children, and there tells the principal that Lucette is an incorrigible child. He orders the strictest surveillance placed over her and leaves. Believing him, the principal is over-zealous in her efforts to discover bad in Lucette's behavior. The least mistakes are made huge and the treatment of the child is made unbearable, not only by the principal, but by the other children as well, who have all been warned against Lucette. It is now bed-time in the dormitory. Lucette is scolded by the principal. All attendants leave the room after turning out the lights. Moonlight streams in the room. The other children with one impulse, leave their beds and assail Lucette. Someone coming down the corridor causes them to scamper back to their cots, and soon after they are all asleep, but not Lucette. To her has come the supreme moment of her girlish life. Her youthful determination fires and resolves to be away from further torment. She remembers a kind old uncle who must live somewhere near the school. She gathers her clothes, dresses and steals out and away from what was little more than a prison. All that night and into the morning she walks and hunts for her uncles' home. Exhaustion overcomes her and she drops unconscious in the road. Here she is found by a van of traveling gypsies who succor and aid her that she may proceed on her way. Lucette leaves them and along the road she decides she can save time and foot-steps by short-cutting across a field. So she climbs the fence and proceeds. She has gone but a short distance through the field when from behind a clump of bushes emerges a herd of cattle. The bull sees her and comes charging forward. Lucette turns and runs. She stumbles and the infuriated beast is upon her. He bellows over his prey, lowers his head to gore and lift her from the ground, when two powerful arms grab his horns. The herders have come up. The bull is thrown and a kind herder takes Lucette to the farm house, where she is again assisted and started on her journey to her uncle's. All day long she trudges, nightfall comes, and with it starts a snow storm. Fatigued and disheartened, Lucette collapses again. Some strolling players pass along and take her into their caravan. They reach their destination, pitch their camp and give a performance. The chief performer is a wonderful dancer. That night while all are asleep the principal and monster snake escapes from his box, into where Lucette lies sleeping. He crawls upon her. An ember in the camp fire pops, a performer awakes, looks around and sees the peril of little Lucette. Cautiously the others are awakened. The dancer reaches Lucette, a pounce and a gripping grasp, and she holds the treacherous serpent, tail in one hand, head in the other. Lucette had been awake all through, but fear-stricken. This fright, coming on top of her sufferings and hardships, undoes her wonderful courage, fever and sickness set in and, unable to properly attend her, one of the players goes to a rich man's home in the neighborhood, a man celebrated for his kindness, and asks him to take care of the dear little child. And he gladly agrees. At the rich man's house, Lucette receives every proper care and attention. She survives what threatened a fatal illness. She is questioned and it transpires that her benefactor knew her mother intimately well in her maiden days. Her mother is sent a message telling all. It reaches her as she too is on the verge of nervous collapse which followed the news of Lucette's flight from school. The husband and step-father at last moved to a sense of his horrible vindictiveness against one so helpless to combat it, repents as he sees his wife suffering through her mother's love for her child. Together they go to the rich man's, and all three join hands in the promise to live the future in love and harmony.
- 'The Marigold Hotel' meets 'Lost Horizon'.
- Myrtle Henderson is in love with Harry Marsden, but her father, knowing that the boy is something of a ne'er-do-well, forbids the match and orders Harry from the house. The young people meet clandestinely and go for a walk over the hills. Myrtle accidentally stumbles on the root of a tree, and falls over a cliff. Harry runs to her aid, but finds her unconscious, and thinking her dead, runs away. The father, who has followed them, discovers Myrtle and carries her home, where she revives. In the meantime Harry has gone to the city to find employment, and sometime later Myrtle also secures work in the city. One evening she misses her train home, not arriving until late. Her father, in a rage, accuses her of meeting Harry against his wishes, and turns her from home. Harry has lost his position and contemplates suicide. Myrtle, in despair, intends to do the same thing. By chance of fate they both come to the same dock to jump into the water. She sees him preparing to jump, and rushes to his aid, but is too late. Just as she places her hand on his shoulder he jumps. Two police officers see her, and think she has pushed him overboard. She is arrested and accused of his murder. Harry has not drowned and discovers later that she is accused of his murder. He comes forward with the information that he is the man who jumped into the water, and she is released. Her father, seeing their devotion, accepts Harry as his son-in-law.
- Video Game
- Promotional video for Fox Networks Group's prime TV hit "Outcast."
- In a small village in Antioquia, in Columbia, lives the largest population of Hippos outside of the African continent. Invasive and territorial their ever growing numbers have sparked controversy and debate among the local people and surrounding towns. As non-native animals, their existence has started to cause problems for the surrounding wildlife, the human population and the ecosystem. A delicate topic for the local residence who are extremely fond of the Hippos and consider them as part of their town and cultural identity. But what can be done about these Hippos? What will happen to them and what will happen to the surrounding population? These Hippos are after all, part of a legacy left behind by the most infamous man in Colombia, Pablo Escobar.
- Esmeralda walks through the church as she reflects on her current situation.
- A newly married woman emerges from the church and cares for an outcast woman just outside, to the mystification of the wedding party, and places the ill woman in her own large bed, praying for her recovery.
- In the twilight of the age of chivalry, King Arthur is dead. Queen Guinevere and her companions must flee the wrath of Mordred. As they make their escape from Camelot, they face betrayal and revenge. On the field of battle, they learn the true meaning of sacrifice and honor. This is a tale of hard steel, sharp women, fast horses, and a bloodthirsty werewolf.
- A creature of unknown origin emerges into an apocalyptic world with no memory, but in search of purpose.
- The world is a crazy place and The Popular Outcasts are a group of friends just trying to figure it all out.